Archive for the ‘Blogging’ Category

Protest at Concord NH March 24 2011

Friday, March 25th, 2011

About five hundred outraged citizens, many of them firefighters, teachers and other union members, showed up to protest one amendment to the 2011 budget bill (HR2) at the Legislative Office Building (LOB) across the street from the State House. The Kurk amendment destroys collective bargaining in New Hampshire by reducing all workers covered by a contract to “at-will” employees if their union reaches an impasse in negotiations with their (government) employers. For those in the more civilized countries of the world, an “at-will” employee is one who may be fired at any time, whose terms of employment can be changed at any time by his/her boss; most countries require employment contracts that spell out the rights and duties of employers and employees, but in the US “at-will” is the default contract under which most of us (and virtually all non-union employees) must work.

The committee that approved the amendment met in a small room with seating for only 40 members of the press and general public. The rest of the crowd packed two floors of the LOB and the courtyard in front of the building. A delegation of firefighters and police union members went across the street to ask the Speaker of the House to convene the committee meeting int he great hall of the capitol, where there would be room for more of the public, but they were not allowed to meet with him.
This Concord Monitor story gives the details of the hearing and the issues fairly well.  This WMUR video clip shows a little of what happened in the hearing room. A larger demonstration is planned for next Thursday, when the full budget bill is voted on by the entire 400-plus-member lower house of the state legislature.  There  will be fireworks

Demonstrators Outside Legislative Office Building

Demonstrators Outside Legislative Office Building

Welcome to Newconsin!

Welcome to Newconsin!

Beam Kurk Up!

A humorous play on words based on the name of the union-busting legislator from Weare

Protesters go up the steps and crowd two floors of the LOB

A Chartered Bus Disgorges Union Members at the LOB

A Chartered Bus Disgorges Union Members at the LOB

MySpace Blogs are now Pretty Much Useless

Friday, November 26th, 2010

MySpace blogs used to allow you to see who your subscribers were, to see how many visits your blog had had in the last day or week, and to syndicate your work elsewhere. The content of the blog could use the entire width of the screen. The blog would receive some random visits from people who were attracted to the title or topic, just because it was part of a social network which also included a large number of musician and artist pages. The “kudos” mechanism, similar to but not linked to FaceBook’s “like” mechanism allowed you to let your friends know when you had read the blog, and the comments allowed you to post long responses in such a way that they appeared with the original blog post. All that has now been eliminated or messed up to such an extent that I feel I must move my writings elsewhere.

A couple of months ago, I used a free tool called MySpace Blog Exporter 2.1 to turn my postings at http://www.myspace.com/nhpeacenik/blog/

up to that time into an xml file that could be imported into my WordPress blog ( http://halfredhouse.biz/wordpress/). Now that application has ceased to work, apparently because there is now no longer an rss interface to MySpace blog content.

Some of my MySpace friends have started blogs using BlogSpot, Blogger, or WordPress and now post only “teasers” to the MySpace blog, with a link to the actual blog. This may be a useful idea. but it involves extra work, and MySpace may take away the ability to put links into blog postings at any time. Individual blogs are not socially linked in the way MySpace blogs are, and it takes a lot of effort to “promote” them. Need I mention that FaceBook and Twitter have no real blogging support at all, since they are designed to transmit short pithy (and usually either witty or caustic) messages rather than longer pieces requiring preparation and thought. LiveJournal is practically ideal for posting this kind of longer blog, but it tends to be more a world of its own, where readers need to join in order to fully participate, and its user-base (in the English speaking world at least) is much smaller than that of MySpace.

I guess I’ll port the last few of my blog postings, laboriously by hand, to my WordPress blog and start using the MySpace blog only to post teasers, similar to “bulletins” from now on. It’s so sad that MySpace had a somewhat rickety platform that served many of us so well for years, a platform that could have been shored up and improved carefully and gradually. Instead, it opted to replace that platform with a funhouse hall of mirrors that leads nowhere but to pages full of advertising for “stuff” and promotions for corporate media.

Advice on Organizing Benefit Concerts

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

I just wanted to pass on this very detailed an optimistic blog from radical singer-songwriter David Rovics on how to organize a benefit concert.

http://songwritersnotebook.blogspot.com/2010/05/how-to-organize-benefit-concert.html

Fundraising is something I really don’t like to think about. I hate phone solicitations and other mass fundraising techniques (no matter which end of the phone I’m on), and I feel bad about increasing the amount of guilt in the world, but since our current socio-economic system tends to make fairly tax-supported remedies for hardships and injustices unlikely, we need to do fundraising. Technique does matter, but the overall emphasis needs to be on getting people cheerfully involved in a practical way and only then soliciting funds in a structured way. Rovics says that if people hear about a fundraiser from three plausibly-independent sources, they’ll pay attention to it.  A concert or reading is SO different from a dunning-letter or a robo-call. It has the potential to bring people together in the context of having fun, experiencing art, and even creating the new world in the burnt-out shell of the old.

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Since MySpace has a phobia of anything with “blogspot” in its name, here is the text in full:

When only a few people show up or the band sucks, a benefit concert can be demoralizing. But when done right it can accomplish a number of important goals. It can raise much-needed money for activist groups, energize and inspire your community, help your group do more outreach and networking with the broader community, and they can even help support artists! By my informal accounting, at least 90% of the progressive community could really get something useful out of this article. Please feel free to share it! You can also find it on my Facebook pages and at: www dot songwritersnotebook dot blogspot dot com

Fundraising 101: How to Organize a Benefit Concert

Everybody loves to practice many different forms of social networking, but when it comes to the kind of networking that might allow you or your organization to make money, many people are terrified. In much of the progressive community specifically, people are scared of money. This is a big problem, since we need money, too – whether you’re trying to pay the rent on your infoshop, feed the homeless, buy a plane ticket so you can be a delegate to that conference or participate in the next caravan to Gaza, whatever it is, money is required. In some countries in Europe folks can get on welfare and be full-time activists while the state pays their rent, which is fantastic, but it doesn’t work here in the USA.

I make a living traveling the world and playing concerts, almost all of which are organized by local progressive activists of one kind or another. There are lots of great organizers out there who are able to consistently put together events that allow me to make a living, raise money for their projects, and bring together the local progressive community and leave them feeling inspired – all at the same time! Sometimes, though, the efforts people make result in badly-attended events that leave people feeling discouraged or sometimes well-attended events that, despite good attendance, fail to raise money for the performers or for the cause.

Aside from blizzards, volcanic eruptions, police raids and other things that are pretty hard to control, there are three main reasons why a benefit gig fails to be a benefit gig: fear of money, lack of effort or lack of knowledge about how to do a good job of organizing one. Lack of effort usually is tied to a lack of understanding of what’s required to make the thing work, so I won’t say anything more on that one, but I’ll just run you through what’s involved with doing it right.

But first, a promise: you never again need to utter phrases such as “we don’t know how many people might show up,” “we don’t have any money,” “we tried to get the word out but we’re not sure if it worked,” “there are a lot of other things happening in town tonight so we don’t know what’s going to happen,” “I’m so nervous because I don’t know if we’re going to get a crowd,” etc. Whether you live in a big city, a college town, or even an economically-depressed town of a few thousand people somewhere in Appalachia, a few people each putting in a few hours a week of their time for a month leading up to an event is enough to result in an event that will raise between one and three thousand dollars and be attended by fifty to two hundred local people – consistently.

Symbiotic Buzz and Enthusiasm

The steps I’m going to run through below mostly pertain to some aspect of publicity. There are two things underpinning these different forms of publicity. One is that it all must be done in order to work – these things work best in symbiosis. By themselves they won’t do as much, and most crucially, they won’t generate the ever-important buzz. You are trying to create a situation that sparks the powerful phenomenon known as word of mouth. You need this to go viral, and you can make it do that, every time. Along with not skipping anything, you need to do it all with enthusiasm. This is an exciting, community-building event you’re organizing. The performer(s) are fantastic and come from far away. You will meet your next best friend as well as the love of your life at this gig, etc., it is undoubtedly the place to be this week.

Charging a Cover

By passing around a bucket and asking for donations, in most cases, you will raise a small fraction of what you could raise by charging a cover. If you let the bucket sit somewhere without passing it around you’ll usually raise even less. You can have a sign saying “no one turned away for lack of funds,” and people with no money can still come. But, you worry, this may make people feel uncomfortable and it’s less intrusive for those folks if there’s a bucket which they can quietly ignore. And this is true! However, if you want to do it right you have to charge a cover. What this means, to be precise, is to sit in front of the entrance with a cash box, look everybody in the eye, and ask them for $10 (or whatever you’re charging, but in most of the US $10 is a good minimum amount to charge for a benefit show).

Advance Tickets and Sponsors

One of the advantages to charging a set cover is that you can sell advance tickets. Advance ticket sales can be your biggest way to make money. The money is raised, and most of the networking happens, long before the actual show. It’s a win-win situation. In terms of advance ticket sales to individuals, the individual gets to support the cause whether or not they show up to the gig. Most people who say “I’ll definitely be there” mean “I’m not sure if I’ll make it but I think it’s really cool that you’re doing this.” Let them show their support by buying a ticket – then they’ll feel much better when they don’t make it to the event.

Another advantage is it can be a great networking opportunity and can be an important factor in the word on the street going viral. Here’s one way to do it: go talk to people who work for a nonprofit, who run a small business, or who are involved with an activist group, a church, a union, or any other such grouping of people. Ask them if they want to cosponsor your event by buying 5 advance tickets for $50, and if they’d like to have their name on publicity materials as cosponsors. They can re-sell their tickets, use them themselves, give them away to their members or volunteers, etc. Talk to 30 people involved with different groups and you’ve raised over $1,000 — weeks before the show happens!

Venues, Artists and Conventional Publicity

Three very common mistakes people make when they’re organizing shows are: relying on venues, relying on the performer(s), and relying on the local newspaper to do much publicity – it’s almost a certain way to make sure the gig’s a flop if you focus too much on these traditional methods of publicizing events. Having said that, they are all still important potential ways to get more folks to come to your event.

In terms of the venue, aside from looking for a nice place that’s free or cheap to use and will let us charge a cover, it can help a lot if the place is well-known and easy to get to for local people. Good music venues, whether it’s a club that focuses on live music, a cafe that sometimes has performers, or a church coffeehouse series, will have an email list and contacts with local press.

While the venue may get your gig listed in the paper they will be unlikely to get you a cover story in the Arts section, which is the only print publicity that will really make much difference in terms of attendance. The possibility that the paper will run a story is of course completely uncertain, but the chances can be helped immensely if you send in a pre-written article about the artist coming to your town and other information about the event so they can run the story without having to pay a reporter to write it. They do this all the time – for better or for worse it is the norm at this point. The main problem with any publicity the venue or the local paper does is that it is not targeted to your organization’s constituents nor to the artists fans, the two groups of people most likely to attend the event. It’s great to get publicity out to a broad audience, but only a tiny minority of the general public who hear about an event will go to it.

In terms of the performer(s) and the publicity they might be able to do, there are several factors to bear in mind. If the musician is a local they probably perform locally too often to be able to help a whole lot with publicity. If the performer(s) are from far away, even if they have a big following, make a living as touring performers, and have many thousands of people on their email list altogether, they probably don’t have more than a few dozen contacts on their list in any given city, and even if they only perform in your area once a year or less, probably not more than 10% of the people on their local list are going to come to a given show.

Social Networking, Facebook and Community Media

Effective social networking is very important and it mainly happens off-line. It seems terribly old-fashioned these days and it may not seem very attractive because it involves a serious time commitment. I’m talking about talking to your actual, real-life friends, acquaintances, neighbors and coworkers, giving them info about the show, encouraging them to come and encouraging them to help get the word out, sell advance tickets, etc. Use the phone, talk to people in person, and send emails to individual people.

Online social networking is also of great potential importance if you do it right. These days, doing it right means one thing in particular: having a Facebook account and knowing how to use it. One important way to use it is to create an Event page for the show and Tag everybody you can think of in your area, or people who know lots of folks in your area, including the performers! Share that on your Profile page regularly, keep putting it on the top and weekly reminding other people to do the same.

In terms of community media, on the one hand I’m talking about email lists and websites related to local groups with constituencies that are relevant to your event, one way or another. Bear in mind that even with a popular email list less than 10% of recipients will even open a given email, let alone read it. So as with most other forms of publicity, don’t rely much on this avenue, but use it as much as possible and make sure any lists that are remotely relevant to your event are covered, hopefully on multiple occasions in the weeks leading up to the event.

On the other hand I’m talking about your local Pacifica affiliate or other community or college radio station. Get the show listed in the community calendar and try to line up phone or live interviews with hosts of relevant local programs. Don’t expect much from this, but it’s good to hook up the performers with the radio hosts in order to try to facilitate what you really want to line up, which is for someone at the station to create a PSA (Public Service Announcement, or cart) to plug the event, which, if all goes well, they will run during the breaks in the most popular program on the station (probably Democracy Now!) daily for a couple weeks leading up to the event. If they do this, this will bear fruit, far beyond anything else a community radio station might do for you. If there’s any chance of getting them to do this it will only work if the show is a benefit (preferably a benefit for the station itself).

Outside of the US, including in most of Europe, there’s not much in the way of community radio but there are mainstream local stations and even national programs you have a good chance of getting on to promote your event if you make an effort.

Posters and Handbills

Unless the performers at the event are very, very famous, posters are the least likely way to get an audience because it’s not a targeted form of publicity, unless you put them up on popular bulletin boards in places where people look for info on events like yours, in which case the poster will get covered up within a few hours, so you have to return to the coop every day in many cases for this really to help. All forms of publicity are good, especially because each one reinforces the other and helps a little in getting that all-important viral effect happening, so do put up posters, but bear in mind that by themselves they’re unlikely to have much impact.

The idea with handbills, on the other hand, is to use them in a more targeted way, and this can be very effective (but, as usual with effective things, more time-consuming for you). What this means is going to events that are likely to attract supporters of your organization or fans of the artist(s) and handing out small fliers about the event. Putting one on everybody’s chair before the event begins and handing them out as people are leaving the event is the idea.

Artist Compensation

How you and your artist(s) deal with this question is up to you, but I encourage you to consider that if you’re working with professional performers, even relatively well-known ones, they are probably quite low-income and may very well be wondering how they’re going to pay next month’s rent. Whether or not you make a guarantee of a certain payment with them, consider paying the musicians as part of your overhead along with other expenses involved with putting on the event. Bear in mind that hopefully your goal in putting on this event is to network and build your organization, raise money for it, as well as to foster a sense of community. Artists are integral to this process and need to be paid if they are to continue to share their talents with the public.

Other Odds and Ends

The causes that people will most readily get enthusiastic about are generally situations where there is a tangible, immediate project at hand that you’re trying to raise money for, whatever it may be – raising money to send people to a conference or protest that’s happening in two months, raising money to buy a new computer for your local pirate radio station, or to pay the rent for your local community theater, etc.

In your publicity materials don’t say what time the event ends – just say what time it begins. Just trust me on that one.

Hopefully your event is going to be big enough that you’ll need to have a sound system. Don’t assume that the venue has one or that the artist is traveling with one – just ask them. If you need to rent one you can usually do this cheaply at a local music store – or see if they’ll cosponsor the event by loaning you a sound system for free (and getting 5 advance tickets in exchange). A local musician may have a sound system you can borrow as well, whereas a traveling musician may have left theirs at home (if they have one).

Along with good sound, lighting can make a huge difference in terms of how the event feels. Even if you’re having an event in a sterile lecture hall with fluorescent lights you can turn off those lights and bring in a couple of tall lamps to light the stage area instead. If there are no real stage lights in the venue you’re using be creative and figure out how to light the event in a cozy way, without fluorescents or bright lights everywhere.

Keep your event short – not too short, but leave people wanting more. Don’t schedule so many performers so that you risk people leaving mid-way through the night. A little over two hours is a good maximum length. Have breaks in between acts where people can freely mingle. Make sure the main performers on the bill are really good, and preferably have a significant following. If they’re not good performers, then your publicity efforts are less likely to go viral and people are much less likely to come to future events you organize, or to feel particularly inspired the end of it.

Having a raffle at the event — after attempting to sell raffle tickets to everybody who walks in the door, raffle prizes somewhere nearby and visible – is a great way to raise still more money at your event, sometimes a lot more. A lot of people will gladly buy multiple raffle tickets if you’re doing a raffle, regardless of the prizes, but most people will be encouraged by knowing what the prizes are. They don’t need to be terribly impressive though – a bottle of wine, a bottle of Palestinian olive oil, relatively little things like that will do the trick.

Summary

Doing a good job of organizing and publicizing a fundraiser is a lot like doing social change generally – there’s no one way to do it, but by using lots of different avenues people get the sense that something is happening that they want to be a part of. People need to hear about your event in at least three different ways that seem to be independent of each other. Then they’ll get excited about it and start telling their friends to meet them at the show.

A different version of this essay, more oriented to organizing shows specifically for me, can be found if you go to www.davidrovics.com and click on “How to Organize a Show.”

Jude Cowan’s “Doodlebug Alley”

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

I recently reviewed Jude Cowan’s fine, emotionally-engaging new album “Doodlebug Alley”, which I heartily recommend, at last.fm. Last.fm has taken a big step away from being what it was by eliminating the full-track play feature, but it still has a salutary focus on connecting music, musicians, and fans, and it’s a good place to post a review.

The review is at: http://www.last.fm/user/nhpeacenik/journal/2010/04/17/3kkurq_doodlebug_alley%2C_by_jude_cowan .

And here is a player that lets you sample some of her work:

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She explains how she came to create the album (and particularly the title track) in this blog:
http://blogs.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendId=292935956&blogId=533039434

Accidentally deleted all my Youtube videos

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

I was uploading a video to YouTube today and it didn’t stop uploading after about an hour and a half. I decided to delete it and start over. In the process, I seem to have deleted all the videos I have ever posted there. If you try to watch any of my YouTube videos that are posted on this blog, you won’t be able to until I have uploaded them and edited the links. I apologize profusely.

WUML Community DJ Podcast Site Up and Running Again

Thursday, December 20th, 2007

With very few exceptons, the sound files at the WUML Community DJs Podcast Site are back in place and playable again, thanks to the hard work of the folks at the Community Software Lab.

WUML Community DJ podcast site still having problems

Friday, December 14th, 2007

The WUML Community DJs Pdacat Site  is still having problems. Please bear with us; we hope to have them corrected soon. Some of the most recent posts are available, but older posts, especially Thinking Out Loud programs, are unavailable temporarily.

WUML Community DJ podcast site unavailable

Wednesday, September 19th, 2007

If you’ve tried to visit our podcast site at http://communications.uml.edu/connections in th e last two days, you’ve probably been prompted to log in. The server has been taken offline because some spam links were discovered. I hope it becomes available later today, but if not, I may post links to some of the podcasts from another location.

Update 9/20/2007: The site is back up but with a default WordPress format that makes it a litle harder to navigate. Click the “topic” links in the right column to get to the show you’re looking for.

Update 9/21/2007: The old look is back, with a few minor modifications.

My daughter in Northern Ireland

Monday, January 22nd, 2007

My daughter, who is on a semester abroad in Northern Ireland working with Peace and Reconciliation groups and studying the history of Northern Ireland and the “troubles”. her blog is full of interesting reflections and photos, and it is well worth visiting. One of her more recent posts talks about the city where she is living, which she calls “slash city” because it is usually spelled with a slash in the middle to acknowledge that it has two or more names: London/Derry.

Jeff and Benares Live Podcast

Monday, January 22nd, 2007

Jeff and Benares came to play live in the tiny WUML studios a couple of weeks ago. I heard them on my car radio on the way back from the weekly peace vigil in Peterborough, hoping that someone was recording them; alas nobody was recording. Their music reminds me of the Everly Brothers, the Kossoy Sisters, and numerous string-band groups from the ‘sixties, among other great sounds. They write their own material and play an incredible variety of instruments, even in the closet-like temporary WUML studios.

When they made a return appearance at the radio station last Saturday, I was determined to get them recorded somehow, so I suggested that Tracey Milton, the host of the long-running folk show “Almost Acoustic” record the performance on a minidisk. I also set up  my computer at home to records the WUML stream from 10:30, when I left the house until whenever I got back from Peterborough. Record high winds were forecast fotr that day, and I assumed that the power would go out (as it has some 10 times so far this winter) and I’d lose the recording. I took along a boombox and a minidisk recorder, so I could try recording in Peterborough, some 40 miles from the Lowell transmitter. The reception on the boombox was lousy, so I ended up recording from the car radio using a mike. The resulting recording is quite good, considering the conditions under which it was made: sirens and friendly conversations with dancers arriving for the “snowball” 12-hour contradance are overlaid over the recording at certain points.

Fortunately or unfortunately, I won’t have to use the Peterborough recording. It turned out that the winds were not as bad as forecast, the power stayed on, and I was able top make a podcast of the show after I got home. The minidisk was also successfully recorded in the studio, and it may be in stereo (the current podcast is in mono), so we may end up posting it on the WUML podcast site too at some point. Jeff and Benares appear in part two of the podcast. [UPDATE 2010-09-03] I have restored the interview portion of the show, and it is available at the above podcast URL]